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Islam, Migration and the Political Economy of Meaning: Fergo Nioro from the Senegal River Valley, 1862–1890
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
The Muslim social movement known as the fergo Nioro provides a case of popular elaboration of the message of a leader of jihad. Umar Tal's call to holy war led to the conquest of Karta in the mid-1850s, and his call to hijra resulted in the migration of perhaps 20,000 Senegal-valley Fulbe to form a Muslim settler community. In the years after Umar's departure from Karta in 1859, military leaders and others in the Fulbe settler community sent envoys to recruit additional settlers from the Senegal valley. At least 16,000 and perhaps as many as 30,000 Fulbe responded to this recruitment effort and left Bundu, Futa Toro and the lower Senegal valley between 1862 and 1890. Two periods of more massive migration coincided with the residence at Nioro of Amadu Sheku, Umar's son and designated successor. During the late 1860s and early 1870s, a cholera epidemic swept up the Senegal valley, claimed thousands of victims, and encouraged Fulbe to leave the region for Karta. During the mid-1880s, French policies in the Senegal valley, notably the emancipation of slaves and moves to halt Fulbe raids in the lower Senegal valley, influenced the social movement.
In both periods of large-scale migration and at other times, the Umarian envoys constructed an appeal which elaborated and even transformed Umar's call to hijra. Umar's insistence on holy war was a dominant theme in all periods, and resonated with the young men who left the valley in hopes of accumulating wealth through warfare. His condemnation of French influence in the Senegal valley was also expressed in the Arabic letters delivered by envoys. Umar's emphasis on the cutting of social bonds was not emphasized, as Fulbe settlers sought to attract relatives and neighbors to the new Fulbe communities in Karta.
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References
1 An earlier version of this article appeared as a paper at the Annual Meeting of the US African Studies Association in Seattle, Washington, in 1992. I would like to thank the panel's organizer, Andrew Clark, its discussant, Philip Curtin, and Martin Klein for his comments from the audience. I also appreciated the comments from David Robinson and two other (anonymous) readers for the Journal. Errors in fact and any misjudgments in interpretation are my own.
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20 ANS 13G 127:Podor, 18 Mar. 1878, Ct. Podor to the Governor; 13G187: Bakel, 31 May and 6 June 1887, Ct. Bakel to Ct. Superior.
21 ANS 1D73: Kayes, 31 Oct. 1883, Ct. Superior to the Governor; ANS 15G126: Kita, 29 Apr. 1884, Ct. Kita to the Ct. Superior.
22 ANF SOM SEN, 1, 61c: St. Louis, 22 Mar. and 5 June 1878, Governor to the Minister.
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25 Various Fulbe leaders in Toro returned with daughters of the Bamana ruling family. ANS 13G101: Dagana, 5 Feb. 1863, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
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29 ANF SOM SEN, 1, 61c: St. Louis, 22 Mar. and 5 June 1878, Governor to the Minister.
30 ANS 13G171: Bakel, 1 Apr. 1869, Ct. Bakel to the Governor; 13G185: Bakel, ‘Copie du registre journal de poste’, May 1885.
31 ANS 13G41: St. Louis, 6 Mar. 1878, to the Director of Political Affairs(?); Salde, 1 May 1886, Ct. Salde to the Governor.
32 ANS 13G41: St. Louis, n.d. [Aug. 1886?], ‘Declaration du nommé Aly Binta’.
33 ANS 13G113: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Sept. 1886; 13G41: Podor, 1 Nov. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor (copy).
34 ANS 13G41: Dagana, 19 and 20 June, 3 and 30 Sept. 1886, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; Podor, 2 and 8 Sept., 22 Oct. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Director of Political Affairs. For the Devès family, see Manchuelle, François, ‘Métis et colons: la famille Devès et l'émergence politique des Africains au Sénégal, 1881–1897’, Cah. ét. Afr. XCVI (1984), 477–504.Google Scholar
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36 ANS 13G187: Bakel, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Feb., Apr., May, June 1887.
37 ANS 13G132: Podor, 1 Oct. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor; and ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Jan. 1887.
38 ANM 1D51: ‘Notice historique sur la région du Sahel par Ct. de Lartigues’; ANS 1D105: ‘Rapport sur la campagne, 1889–90’; 1G310: Kayes, 30 Mar. 1904, ‘Renseignements historiques’.
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47 The first use of this strategy occurred in 1869. ANS 13G104: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Apr. 1869.
48 ANS 13G113: Dagana, 12 Mar. 1869, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G171: Bakel, 1 Apr. 1869, Ct. Bakel to the Governor.
49 ANS 13G103: Dagana, 6 Oct. 1868, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G124: Podor, 26 Jan. 1869, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
50 Coulibaly, Boubacar, ‘L'Armée toucouleur du jihād omarien’ (Université Cheikh Anta Diop, mémoire de maîtrise, 1978).Google Scholar
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52 ANF SOM SEN, VII, 16a: St. Louis, 18 Dec. 1889, Governor to the Minister.
53 ANM 1D51 (census reports for 1895 and 1899) and 5D29/5D36 (census reports for 1904).
54 See note 7 above.
55 ANM 1D82: ‘Rapport sur la necessité de donner aux Peuls Toronké du Kingi un état social’, 1905.
56 This figure is an estimate, as the French did not make much of an effort to count the numbers of Umarian dead. Various figures are reported for individual battles in ANS 1D103, 1D104, 1D117.
57 ‘La population de la vallée de Sénégal: compte-rendu de la réunion tenue à Dakar les 21, 22, 23 mai 1984’ (mimeo, 1984) Robinson, , Chiefs and Clerics, 184–90.Google Scholar
58 ANS 13G100: Dagana, 23 Mar. 1858, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G101: Dagana, 11 June and 31 Oct. 1859, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
59 ANS 13G101: Dagana, 9 Nov. 1863, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
60 ANM 1E201: Kayes, 10 July 1891, Ct. Kayes to Ct. Superior Archinard; 1D119: ‘Rapport sur la campagne, 1890–91’.
61 Most French officials prepared monthly reports on agriculture, commerce and political affairs.
62 ANS 13G127: Podor, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Aug.-Dec. 1878.
63 ANS 13G101: Dagana, 9 Nov. 1863, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G102: Dagana, 17 Feb. 1864, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G112: Dagana, 1 Feb. 1883, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
64 Martin translates this passage of Umar's Rimāh in Muslim Brotherhoods, 82. He substitutes ‘migration’ for hijra in his text.
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70 ANS 13G103: pièce 9.
71 ANS 13G103: Podor, 17 Feb. 1866, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
72 A full English translation appears in Hanson and Robinson, After the Jihād, Document 8c.
73 Qurʾan 4: 100.
74 ANS 13G144, pièce 131. The document is discussed in Hanson, and Robinson, , After the Jihād, 177Google Scholar. Ali ibn Umar never mentions his exact location in the letter.
75 A full English translation appears in Hanson and Robinson, After the Jihād, Document 13d.
76 To my knowledge, the French intercepted no other letters, and the Arabic materials from Nioro and Segu do not contain copies of letters sent to the Senegal valley.
77 For a sampling of letters, see ANS 13G102: Dagana, 8 July 1864, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G123: Podor, 24 Dec. 1866, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; 13G131: Podor, 25 Dec. 1882, Ct. Podor to the Director of Political Affairs; 13G41: Podor, 1 Nov. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
78 In addition to the interviews cited in note 23 above, I have consulted interviews that I conducted in Nioro-du-Sahel and the surrounding villages in 1985–6 as well as additional interviews conducted by Abdoul Aziz Diallo in the villages surrounding Nioro.
79 This theme emerges most clearly in Diallo's interviews with Mamadou Alfa Diallo (see note 23 above) and in my interview with Amadou Ba on 26 Jan. 1986 at Nioro-du-Sahel, Mali.
80 Bello, Muhammad, Infaq al-maisur, 208–9Google Scholar; Delafosse, Maurice, ‘Traditions musul-manes relatives à l'origine des peuls’, Revue du Monde Musulman, XX (1912), 242–67Google Scholar; Diallo, Thierno, ‘Origine et migration des Peuls avant le XIVe siècle’, Annales de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Dakar, 11 (1972)Google Scholar; Irwin, Paul, Liptako Speaks (Princeton, 1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Robinson, , Holy War, 81–9.Google Scholar
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83 ANS 13G132: Podor, 1 Oct. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor; Mamadou Alfa Diallo, interview conducted by Abdoul Aziz Diallo in September 1979 at Gavinané, Mali.
84 ANS 13G103: Fanaye, n.d. [Sept. 1866?], Amadu Khardiatta to Ct. Dagana (Arabic, pièce 33); 13G131: Podor, 25 Dec. 1882, Ct. Podor to the Director of Political Affairs; 13G132: Podor, 1 Oct. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
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88 Robinson translates this passage in ‘Colonial politics and historical texts’, 6.
89 David Robinson's interviews with Hamady Sayande Ndiaye in February 1974 at Seno Palel, Senegal, and with Samba Bokar Seek in Apr. 1968 at Semme, Senegal, cited in Holy War, 224.
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93 ANS 13G103: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Dec. 1868.
94 ANS 13G104: Dagana, 19 Apr. and 10 May 1869, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
95 ANS 13G104: Dagana, 3 Apr. 1869, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
96 ANS 13G104: Dagana, 3 Apr. 1869, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
97 ANS 13G104: Dagana, 30 Apr. 1869, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
98 Robinson, , Chiefs and Clerics, 83ff.Google Scholar
99 ANS 13G145: Aéré, 21 Oct. 1869, Ct. Aéré to the Governor.
100 ANS 13G104: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, May 1869.
101 ANS 13G171: Bakel, 1 Mar. 1870, testimony of Ali Aliou Senou and Tafsir Alioune (French translation of interview sessions with Ct. Bakel in the presence of an interpreter).
102 ANS 13G171: Bakel, 28 Feb. and 30 May 1871, Ct. Bakel to the Governor.
103 ANS 1D34: Gandiole, 12 Feb. 1875, telegram to the Governor
104 ANS 13G108: Dagana, n.d. [1875?], ‘Rapport sur la répression exercée sur les partisans du marabout dans le Dimar’.
105 ANS 13G109: Dagana, 3 Aug. 1877, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; Faliu,‘Les Peuls Oudabé’, first interview with Boubaker Sadio (see note 23).
106 ANS 13G108: Dagana, 29 Mar. 1875, Ct. Dagana to the Governor and Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, March, 1875; 13G145: Aéré, 21 Oct. 1869, Ct. Aéré to the Governor and 13G127: Podor, 18 Mar. 1878, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
107 ANS 13G109: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Jan., Feb., Mar. 1878; Faliu, ‘Les Peuls Oudabé’; first interview with Boubakar Sadio.
108 ANS 2B75: St. Louis, 11 Apr. 1885, Governor to the Minister; 13G101: Dagana, 22 Feb. and 27 Sept. 1862, Ct. Dagana to the Governor; Robinson, , Chiefs and Clerics, 136–7.Google Scholar
109 ANS 13G41: St. Louis, 6 Mar. 1878, to Director of Political Affairs(?).
110 ANS 13G109: Dagana, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Jan., Feb., Mar. 1878.
111 ANS 13G127: Podor, 14 Mar. 1878, Ct. Podor to Ct. Bakel; Podor, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Nov. 1878; 13G145: Aéré, ‘Bulletin agricole, commercial et politique’, Nov. 1878.
112 Renault, L'Abolition de l'esclavage.
113 The information was published monthly in Le Moniteur du Senegal et Dépendences.
114 ANF SOM SEN, XIV, 17: St. Louis, 27 Sept. 1892, interim Governor to the Minister, quoted in Renault, , L'Abolition de l'esclavage, 37Google Scholar, n 2.
115 This estimate is based on the Governor's reference to the numbers of emancipations in selected months of 1881–2. See ANS 2B74: St. Louis, 20 Apr., 20 June and 20 July 1882, Governor to the Minister.
116 Echenberg, Myron, Colonial Conscripts: The Tirailleurs Sénégalais in French West Africa, 1857–1960 (Portsmouth, N.H., 1991).Google Scholar
117 For example, the commandant at Podor noted that, at a meeting with all the major Fulbe leaders of Toro province, the response to his question about the reasons for migration was unanimous: ‘the liberation of slaves, the eternal argument of those who wish to explain their fanaticism’ (emphasis in the original). ANS 13G41: Podor, 15 Dec. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
118 ANS 13G111: Dagana, 1 Aug. 1881, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
119 ANS 13G112: Dagana, 1 Apr. 1883, Ct. Dagana to the Governor.
120 ANS 13G132: Podor, 16 Apr. 1885, Ct. Podor to the Governor.
121 ANS 13G185: Bakel, ‘Copie du registre journal de poste’, May 1885.
122 ANS 13G132: Podor, ‘Rapport politique’, Jan. 1885; 1D117: Bandiougoula, 12 Jan. 1891, Ruault to Colonel Archinard; Faliu, ‘Les Peuls Oudabé’, first interview with Boubaker Sadio.
123 ANM 1E207: Medine, 1 May 1886, Ct. Medine to Ct. Cercles; ANS 13G41: Richard Toll, 12 Mar. 1886, Captain to Governor.
124 ANS 13G132: Aéré, 8 Jan. 1886, Ct. Aéré to the Governor; 1D95: ‘Rapport sur la campagne, 1888–89’; 1D105: ‘Rapport sur la campagne, 1889–90’.
125 ANS 13G41: St. Louis, 24 Aug. 1886, Director of Political Affairs to the Governor; Podor, 12 Sept. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Director of Political Affairs; Podor, n.d., Ct. Podor to Director of Political Affairs (pièce 140).
126 ANS 13G41: Podor, 1 Nov. 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor, and Podor, n.d., Ct. Podor to the Governor (pièce 140).
127 ANS 13G113: Dagana, 7 Apr. and 17 June 1885, Ct. Dagana to the Director of Political Affairs.
128 ANS 13G41: ‘Circulaire’ of 13 Apr. 1887.
129 ANS 13G41: Podor, 3 July 1886, Ct. Podor to the Governor (copy).
130 ANF SOM SEN, 1, 80b: St. Louis, 6 Feb. 1889, Governor to the Minister; ANS K12: St. Louis, 18 Dec. 1889, Governor to the Minister (draft).
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